107 Neb. 521 | Neb. | 1922
This was an action to enjoin the city of Rulo from entering into a contract for the purchase and installation of water-mains, fire hydrants and a standpipe, and from levying the cost thereof as a special assessment against the property in the district claimed to be especially benefited by such improvement. The trial court granted a permanent injunction, and the defendant has ■ appealed.
The defendant city of Rulo is a city of the second class, and its authority to act in the matter involved is based upon certain provisions of section 5119, Rev. St. 1913.
The section referred to covers several pages of the statute, and there are embodied therein, in an incoherent and strangely disarranged fashion, matters having to do with the taking over and control of private water-works systems; the construction and acquisition of waterworks by the city, both for fire protection and for the use of water consumers; the publication of notices to bidders and the letting of contracts; the matter of borrowing money and issuing bonds and of meeting their payment through a general tax; the matter of charging the cost of construction of portions of the plant by special assessment to property benefited; the matter of holding elections by the voters to authorize the issuance of bonds; the matter of the extraterritorial power of the city to do certain acts incidental to the establishment and operation of a water system.; the matter of fixing rates and charges for the use of water; the mattter of collecting and applying all income from rents and profits arising from the operation of such plants; and the matter of providing a water commissioner, defining his duties and salary, and fixing the method of his appointment and removal.
The provisions particularly involved here give the city the power by ordinance, “to provide for the purchase of steam engines or fire-extinguishing apparatus and for a supply of water for the purpose of fire protection and public use and for the use of the inhabitants of such cities and villages by the purchase, erection or construction of a system of water-works, water-mains or extension of any system of water-works now
A special election Avas held in the city of Rulo, and by vote of the electors the city Avas authorized to expend not to exceed $13,000 for the purpose of constructing a Avater system, exclusive of water-mains, hydrants, and a standpipe. The assessed valuation of all the property in the city of Rulo Avas approximately $67,000, and the $13,000 authorized expenditure Avas, therefore, nearly 20 per cent, of such total assessed value. Upon receiving this authority from the electors, the city council proceeded to let a contract for the construction of pumps, buildings, filter-plants and other Avater-plant appurtenances, the cost of which, by the contract, Avas to be $11,995. This left the matter of a standpipe and water-mains entirely unprovided for. The city council, then, by unanimous vote, in order to provide for those portions Avhich had been omitted, and which were essential to a complete Avater-works system, passed a resolution describing the entire city of Rulo as a special assessment district, setting forth a plan for the erection of a standpipe and the construction of water-mains and hydrants throughout the city, the estimated cost of all of which was $30,033.86, and which cost Avas proposed to be assessed against the property in the city, according to benefits. By the íavo methods, then, of general taxation and special assessment, the city proposed to expend some $42,000 for the construction of a water-plant, mains and reservoir, Avhich is approximately 60 per cent, of the total assessed value of the taxable property in the city, when, if the city had pursued the one method alone of paying for the identical properties by general taxation, its expenditures would unquestionably have been limited to 20 per cent, of such assessed value.
By the provisions of the statute referred to the city is given authority to construct an entire water systenq including pumps, reservoir and mains, and to pay for the same by general taxation. It is limited in that
The pumps, standpipe, filter-plants and station are, in their nature, improvements of a general public character, conferring a like benefit over the city generally, and are only to a small degree, except, perhaps, under special circumstances, improvements of a local character which would confer special benefits upon any particular property in the city. The legislature could, had it seen fit, have provided that those particular portions of the water system should be constructed and paid for by general taxation, and could have provided a limit to the expenditures to be made for that purpose; and the legislature could have provided that the water-mains and such portions of the plant, which are constructed throughout the city and are strictly in the nature of local improvements, conferring special benefits upon one property or another, as might happen to be adjacent to such improvement, should be paid for by special assessments, without limitation as to the amount of such special assessments, except that they should not exceed in amount the value of the benefits conferred upon the property taxed. The provisions of the statute do not so segregate those two classes of property improvements. The provision for raising funds to provide a water sys
The distinction in principle underlying the levy of a general tax and the levy of special assessments is lost sight of when the improvement proposed is of such a character and of such general benefit to the entire city that all the property in the city must be included within a single taxation district, so as to make it possible that the special assessment may be made. Village of Morgan Park v. Wiswall, 155 Ill. 262; Pomroy v. Board of Public Water-Works, 55 Colo. 476; Hughes v. City of Momence, 164 Ill. 16; O’Neil v. People, 166 Ill. 561;
If the legislature intended to prohibit the city from exceeding an expenditure equaling 20 per cent, of the taxable property in the city in the construction of hydrants, water-mains and a reservoir, when the cost was to be paid by general taxation, then, certainly, especially in view of the uncertainty found in the statute, it logically follows that the legislature may also have intended to prohibit any expenditure beyond that limit, when the cost of such improvements was to be paid by special assessment. In either event, it is the same character of public improvements to be constructed and the same property owners who are to be compelled to pay the tax. The purpose of the statute was to protect the taxpayer against excessive expenditure in the purchase by the city of a water system, and to preserve his property from a burden greater than 20 per cent, of its assessed value. It makes little difference to him whether the tax which he is called upon to pay is a general tax or a special assessment. The obvious purpose of the statute, to the end of giving him protection,would be thwarted by a holding that the city authorities might, by special assessment covering the entire property in the city, do what they were clearly prohibited from doing by a general tax. Birdseye v. Village of Clyde, 61 Ohio St. 27.
The power to construct and even to enlarge a waterworks system already constructed is, by the statute, very carefully safeguarded, when the cost is to be paid by general taxation, both by limit of expenditure and by a requirement that authority be first given by the electors at a special election, held for the purpose, and it is reasonable to assume that the legislature did not intend that those safeguards should be rendered nugatory by vesting the absolute power in the city council to purchase the same improvements and incur expenditures
We recognize the rule that ordinarily a limitation upon the authority to levy a general tax does not limit nor concern the matter of taxing by special assessments, since, as we have said, taxation for local improvements is and must be limited to the value of the benefits conferred upon the property taxed. Wickliffe v. City of Greenville, 170 Ky. 528. But in practical operation, such limitation as to special assessments, unless the property owner is alert to make objection, does not always protect him. It is, therefore, entirely feasible and the legislatures sometimes do fix a definite limit, aside from the limitations as to the value of the benefits, and make provision that special assessments shall not exceed, in any case, a certain proportionate value of the property. In this particular statute, the matter of acquiring a water-works system and the matter of limitation of expenditures, as -well as the provisions for general taxation and special assessments, are so embodied in the same section of the statute as to give rise to some uncertainty and leave in doubt the real intention of the legislature. There is no’ specific provision that special assessments shall be in accordance with and not to exceed the benefits, but the wording is that so much of the expense “as may be just and lawful” may be levied against the property benefited. That is a phrase of ambignous meaning, in view of the previous evident intention to make a limitation of expenditures in the acquisition of a water-works system. Throughout the statute there is apparent an idea, on the part of the legislature, that expenditures for the purpose of the acquisition of a water-works system shall be limited and the property owner safeguarded. Even an expenditure for extensions equaling 5 per cent, of the assessed value of the property is not allowed to be incurred, under section 5120, Rev. St. 1913, except by consent of the electors by vote at special election, and it is declared
It must be remembered in this connection that, when the city creates an improvement district and contracts for the construction of water-mains and a standpipe, it becomes primarily liable upon those contracts, the contracts become an obligation and result in an indebtedness of the city, even though the plan adopted is to levy special assessments in order to raise the funds to pay such indebtedness. Moss v. City of Fairbury, 66 Neb. 671.
It may be further pointed out that the statute does not affirmatively declare that district water bonds shall not be issued when the plan of procedure is by special assessment. If it is necessary arid proper to provide for the issuance of bonds to cover a $13,000 expenditure, to be paid for by general taxation, it would seem as necessary to authorize the issuance of special assessment bonds to provide for an expenditure of $30,000, which is to be met by special assessment. When the right is given to a municipality to provide expensive public improvements, the right to borrow money and issue bonds, when found necessary to carry out the purposes of the statute, has been held to have been impliedly granted. State v. Babcock, 25 Neb. 278; State v. Babcock, 22 Neb. 614.
In fact, one of the methods of meeting the cost of “other public improvements” — paving and repaving — in cities of this class is by the issuance of special assessment bonds. The provision of the statute now under consideration, with regard to the levying of special assessments to cover the cost of water-works, recites that the same procedure shall be followed as is provided for making, special assessments for “other public improvements” in such cities. It is to be noted that there is more than one method for making assessments for other public improvements. Assessments for
Special assessments may equal, but must not exceed, the benefit to the property taxed. The excess in the cost of a local improvement beyond the actual benefits which the property assessed receives cannot be charged against that property without taking from the owner a portion of his property without due process of law and Avithout just compensation. Sayles v. Board of Public Works, 222 Mass. 93. It is difficult to understand, though the record does not set out the facts, how a water system, established in the city of Rulo, would confer benefits to the extent of over 60 per cent, of the assessed value of the property there. Whatever excess in the cost of that, plant would exceed the benefits accruing to the property, obviously, could not be charged against the property, but would be an expense which, if one which the city could legally assume, would have to be borne by general taxation. To that extent again the limit on the power of general taxation becomes involved.
The right delegated to a city to construct local improvements and levy special assessments for the payment thereof is strictly construed against the city, and every reasonable doubt as to the grant of power is resolved against such grant. Missouri, K. & T. R. Co. v. City of Tulsa, 45 Okla. 382; Albers v. City of St. Louis, 268 Mo. 349; 28 Cyc. 1106; Hutchinson v. City of
There is a very serious doubt ás to whether or not the legislature intended that the city should be limited in its expenditures in the acquisition of a water-works system to an amount not to exceed 20 per cent, of the assessed value of the property in the city, even Avhen it proposed to raise the funds for such expenditures by special assessments, ^nd it is our opinion that the doubt as to that matter should be resolved against the city.
For the reasons given, the judgment of the loAver court is
Affirmed.